Tag Archives: Short Reviews

I know, it has been a while. Work, life and a broken laptop. What else can I say. I did manage to get through the TBR Double Dog Dare and read 24 books, not quite as many as I had hoped. Once again, James has inspired me to continue plowing through the piles of unread books I have sitting on shelves and stacked in corners.

I am getting ready for another camping trip with the children and another season of hanging out at the beach, introducing folks to the rich diversity of animals that live in Puget Sound. I’m not sure what the summer will bring.

A surprising combination of middle-eastern fantasy and cyberpunk. The story takes place in an unnamed country whose government is turning into an ultra-high level security state. Internet activists are finding ways to expose corruption and abuse. The backlash is all too familiar. Alif, a talented hacker, find himself running from state security and dealing with creatures he cannot believe exist.

Filled with djinn, demons and a land only accessible by magic, layered with high-tech and folklore, this was a fun read.

I’ve read Lynn Coady before and was impressed. When this novel was short-listed for the 2011 Scotiabank Giller prize and I learned it was being published in the US, I put it on my hold list at the library.

The Antagonist is “quirky” and only an author with Coady’s skill and daring can pull this kind of thing off. When Gordon Rankin, known as Rank, picks up a novel written by Adam, an old college friend and discovers it seems to be a thinly veiled fiction about his life he grows irate. In a series of emails, he rants at Adam and, through those rants, slowly unburies his own memories and untwists his own story. Again, as in her collection of short stories, Coady creates a rough, crude and intimidating character that I couldn’t help liking. I love how this women writes. The Antagonist will be in my top ten books of 2013.

A collective of bibliophiles talking about books. Book Fox (vulpes libris): small bibliovorous mammal of overactive imagination and uncommonly large bookshop expenses. Habitat: anywhere the rustle of pages can be heard.